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Freddy Kempf - Chopin, Etude Op.10 No. 12

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Freddy Kempf is an English pianist, born in 1977 in London to a German father and a Japanese mother. Having resided in London for many years and studying at the Royal Academy of Music, he now lives in Berlin.Taking up the piano at the age of four, Kempf first caught the attention of British concertgoers four years later when he played Mozart's Piano Concerto No. 12, K. 414, with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra at the Royal Festival Hall. The child virtuoso was shortly invited to Germany to repeat his performance. In 1987, Kempf won the first National Mozart Competition in England and in 1992, was named BBC Young Musician of the Year for his performance of Rachmaninoff's Paganini Rhapsody.In a controversial turn of events, Kempf's early adult career ironically benefited from his failure to win the 1998 International Tchaikovsky Competition in Moscow, where the first prize in the piano section went instead to Denis Matsuev. Apparently, some judges had wanted to award the first prize jointly to Matsuev and Kempf and had successfully negotiated with the Russian Culture Ministry for the additional funding. However, Kempf collected only third prize in the end, which provoked a barrage of indignant protests from the audience and the Russian press, who accused some of the judges of bias (especially towards contestants who also happened to be their former pupils).In April 1999, Kempf returned to Moscow with a series of television broadcasts and sold-out concerts. Kempf's popularity has been compared with that garnered by American pianist Van Cliburn who, in a different result in 1958, had won the inaugural Competition.Kempf has continued to perform solo, chamber, and concertante music in Europe, the Americas, East Asia, and Australia, and has recorded recital discs of Bach, Beethoven, Chopin, Liszt, Prokofiev, Rachmaninoff, and Schumann. He was voted Best Young British Classical Performer in the Classical BRIT Awards in 2001.(Wikipedia)

Channel: Music
Uploaded: April 22, 2008 at 6:27 pm
Author: Stravinskij0

Length: 02:38
Rating: 4.76
Views: 3245

Tags: bemolle  classica  classical  etiudy  etudes  fryderyk  fryderyka  maggiore  mi  piano  solo  

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Video Comments

lawbigduck (June 27, 2008 at 4:06 pm)
very nice, totally agitato
z666z666z (June 18, 2008 at 5:27 pm)
If you say :Superb technique, it menas you don´ñt know nothing about it.666
jeaniebaby001 (June 15, 2008 at 11:21 am)
haha. maybe he is trying to express 'ugliness'... ^_^. Ugliness & harshness is at least, qualities that he expressed well? I think he has his own style, not to mention superb technique.
PowHana (May 23, 2008 at 5:33 pm)
this video is more funny then normal video! my names Sydney, kinda feelin bored if any1 wants to join me on cam or wana chat i will be signed on at __ FriendlyFlirts(.COM) __ my user ID there is Sydney_ipfxmauv chat soon xx its FR33 to j0in! mwah
z666z666z (May 19, 2008 at 2:27 am)
-------> are not ugly becuase his prhasings, tempi...are so good, but the sound must be much better i a live performance. At least i got that sensation.... His effortless technique (a think very uncommon) is just amazing. I think that pianist despite he is famous is by far superior to this bluff.666
z666z666z (May 19, 2008 at 2:23 am)
It´s true pogouldiwitz You Tube sound is "Beyond imagination" sometimes... :-) If you add to "You Tube soun" some impèrfections of the recordings...the result is terrible ( not in this case, becuase this is a recording studio session). A clear example of this is a series of 4 videos in You Tube of pianist Claudio Constantini (i think he play really outstanding) but it was a kind of "Homevideo" and the results (despite you realize the pianist qualities) are------->
TheTradge (May 18, 2008 at 11:15 pm)
love this interpretation! Sometimes I think he used a little too much rubato, but generally it's fantastic!
Pogouldiwitz (May 18, 2008 at 5:45 pm)
Btw, my favorite renditions of the etudes come from Murray Perahia and Grigory Sokolov. I like Perahia for his gorgeous sound and his ability to make his phrasing sound effortless and inevitable. I love Sokolov's rendition of the op. 25 etudes for there rhythmic drive, nuanced touch, and sense of spontaneity. However these are just words, approximations of the sublime beauty of their feats of glory.
Pogouldiwitz (May 18, 2008 at 5:37 pm)
You're absolutely right. I think that's what I meant about his technique, it's clean. About the harshness of tone, I can't completely be sure because after all this is youtube sound.
z666z666z (May 18, 2008 at 5:07 pm)
I agrre with you pogouludiwitz, but his tecnique is also very ugly. He plays clean, but that´s all. His fortes are ugly no deepness in tone, just harsh.....and when he pretend to make some nuances between the p and pp , he just can´t666

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